CLIMATE CHANGE AND PLANT DISEASE MANAGEMENT

Author:

Coakley Stella Melugin1,Scherm Harald2,Chakraborty Sukumar3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331;

2. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602;

3. CSIRO Tropical Agriculture, CRC for Tropical Plant Pathology, University of Queensland, Queensland 4072 Australia;

Abstract

▪ Abstract  Research on impacts of climate change on plant diseases has been limited, with most work concentrating on the effects of a single atmospheric constituent or meteorological variable on the host, pathogen, or the interaction of the two under controlled conditions. Results indicate that climate change could alter stages and rates of development of the pathogen, modify host resistance, and result in changes in the physiology of host-pathogen interactions. The most likely consequences are shifts in the geographical distribution of host and pathogen and altered crop losses, caused in part by changes in the efficacy of control strategies. Recent developments in experimental and modeling techniques offer considerable promise for developing an improved capability for climate change impact assessment and mitigation. Compared with major technological, environmental, and socioeconomic changes affecting agricultural production during the next century, climate change may be less important; it will, however, add another layer of complexity and uncertainty onto a system that is already exceedingly difficult to manage on a sustainable basis. Intensified research on climate change–related issues could result in improved understanding and management of plant diseases in the face of current and future climate extremes.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Plant Science

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